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深度墙壁

(2012-08-30 21:18:10)
标签:

杂谈

分类: 城市建设

 

生活在洛杉矶和布鲁克林的艺术家Chris Wiley同时也是一位作家,撰稿人,策展人。他的这系列照片
Technical Compositions有趣又让人惊讶。色彩从冰冷的灰色到活力的橙色,还有丰富的混拼。他只是
拍墙壁而已,但是不仅仅通过镜头反映这个世界,还仿佛表达更深入的场景。看起来像纸片儿的橙色
网格上面却又冒出立体的断面-----原来是瓷砖。拒绝呆板而叙事化的照片。每张照片都不单纯,充满
如此多深度细节,超出自身,在快门的背后以平静但是动态的方式呈现,让人专注的去体会。技术到
位,层次足够。如果这些墙壁会说话,他们讲的故事一定很动听。
 
 
 
 
 
Chris Wiley
Technical Compositions
 
I came to make these photographs by way of distrust. Distrust in the photograph’s beguiling
resemblance to the real, distrust in our tendency to read photographs discursively, and, above all,
distrust in the ability of thephotograph to speak broadly about the state of the world. This is not a
unique distrust, I know, and it oftenacts as a blockade, rather than a starting point. After all, how
can one bring themselves to make a photograph when they are such slippery, unruly beasts,
seemingly hell-bent on telling us false tales and transmuting the fluid stuff of life into a clunky
rattlebag of reified signs? These are problems, obviously. But, in the face of these problems and
the strictures they imply, I set myself the modest goal of simply making pictures, ones that did not
attempt to exceed what I calculate to be the event horizon of photographic meaning.

This is not, perhaps, as straightforward as is sounds. It meant, first and foremost, jettisoning the
analogical model of the photographic frame as a window onto the world, and replacing it with the
model of the box, in which the world is arranged. The photograph then becomes a composition,
rather than a view. This is a funny thing, spatially: rather than allowing for the illusion of real, live,
walking-around space, this analogical shift requires the reigning in of space so that it approaches a
kind of flatness, or at the very least a rigorous boundedness.

Then, there is the question of time. The photograph is not a good storyteller, in part, because it is
not durational. The snapshot, that decisive moment ripped from time, suggests the presence of
times both before and after its making, but the hope of grasping these illusive temporal bookends
is necessarily frustrated—the snapshot is caught in a doomed revolt against its stillness. Better,
then, if one wants to avoid spurious narrativization, to embrace photography’s petrified time, to
allow the moment of the shutter click to become a monument.

Making a picture with this in mind renders the photograph into a still and quiet object, one that
ossifies a moment of attention. Not attention that refers, pointedly, to anything beyond itself, but
merely one that begs an awareness of its very attentiveness. The picture exists to say: look.

Chris Wiley received an MA in contemporary art theory from Goldsmiths College, University of
London, UK in 2006. As a writer, he is a regular contributor to Frieze, ArtForum.com, and
Kaleidoscope, where he also acts as Associate Editor. As a curator, he has worked on numerous
projects at the New Museum of Contemporary Art, and served as an Assistant Curator on the 8th
Gwangju Biennial in Gwangju, South Korea. His most recent curatorial project, “Towards A Warm
Math” will open at On Stellar Rays gallery on April 22nd. He lives and works between Brooklyn and
Los Angeles.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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